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Production and Growth

Production and Growth. ETP Economics Jack Wu. Standard of Living. A country ’ s standard of living depends on its ability to produce goods and services. Within a country there are large changes in the standard of living over time.

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Production and Growth

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  1. Production and Growth ETP Economics Jack Wu

  2. Standard of Living • A country’s standard of living depends on its ability to produce goods and services. • Within a country there are large changes in the standard of living over time. • Living standards, as measured by real GDP per person, vary significantly among nations.

  3. Economic Growth • Annual growth rates that seem small become large when compounded for many years. • Compounding refers to the accumulation of a growth rate over a period of time. Note: Compound growth is the same as compound interest.

  4. Rule of 70 • Suppose the compound growth rate is x%. • An economy should double in size after 70/x years.

  5. Example • Suppose the real GDP/person in Fastcountry grows at an annual rate of 2% and the real GDP/person in Slowcountry grows at an annual rate of 1%. How many years does it take for real GDP/person to double in Fastcountry? In Slowcountry? In 1930, real GDP/person=$2000 in Fastcountry. How much will it be in year 2000?

  6. Why is Productivity So Important? • Productivity plays a key role in determining living standards for all nations in the world. • Productivity refers to the amount of goods and services that a worker can produce from each hour of work. • To understand the large differences in living standards across countries, we must focus on the production of goods and services.

  7. How Productivity is Determined • The inputs used to produce goods and services are called the factors of production. • The factors of production directly determine productivity.

  8. Factors of Production • The Factors of Production • Physical capital • Human capital • Natural resources • Technological knowledge

  9. Physical Capital • Physical Capital • is a produced factor of production. • It is an input into the production process that in the past was an output from the production process. • is the stock of equipment and structures that are used to produce goods and services. • Tools used to build or repair automobiles. • Tools used to build furniture. • Office buildings, schools, etc.

  10. Human Capital • Human Capital • the economist’s term for the knowledge and skills that workers acquire through education, training, and experience • Like physical capital, human capital raises a nation’s ability to produce goods and services.

  11. Natural Resources • Natural Resources • inputs used in production that are provided by nature, such as land, rivers, and mineral deposits. • Renewable resources include trees and forests. • Nonrenewable resources include petroleum and coal. • can be important but are not necessary for an economy to be highly productive in producing goods and services.

  12. Technological Knowledge • Technological Knowledge • society’s understanding of the best ways to produce goods and services. • Human capitalrefers to the resources expended transmitting this understanding to the labor force.

  13. Production Function • Economists often use a production function to describe the relationship between the quantity of inputs used in production and the quantity of output from production.

  14. Production Function Form • Y = A F(L, K, H, N) • Y = quantity of output • A = available production technology • L = quantity of labor • K = quantity of physical capital • H = quantity of human capital • N = quantity of natural resources • F( ) is a function that shows how the inputs are combined.

  15. Returns to Scale • A production function has constant returns to scale if, for any positive number x, xY = A F(xL, xK, xH, xN) • That is, a doubling of all inputs causes the amount of output to double as well.

  16. Returns to Scale: continued • Constant return to scale • Increasing return to scale (economie of scale) • Decreasing return to scale (diseconomie of scale)

  17. Implication from Constant Returns to Scale • Production functions with constant returns to scale have an interesting implication. • Setting x = 1/L, • Y/ L = A F(1, K/ L, H/ L, N/ L) Where: Y/L = output per worker K/L = physical capital per worker H/L = human capital per worker N/L = natural resources per worker

  18. Implication: continued • The preceding equation says that productivity (Y/L) depends on physical capital per worker (K/L), human capital per worker (H/L), and natural resources per worker (N/L), as well as the state of technology, (A).

  19. Government Policy and Economic Growth • Governments can do many things to raise productivity and living standards. • Government Policies That Raise Productivity and Living Standards • Encourage saving and investment. • Encourage investment from abroad • Encourage education and training. • Establish secure property rights and maintain political stability. • Promote free trade. • Promote research and development.

  20. Saving and Investment • One way to raise future productivity is to invest more current resources in the production of capital.

  21. Diminishing Returns • As the stock of capital rises, the extra output produced from an additional unit of capital falls; this property is called diminishing returns. • Because of diminishing returns, an increase in the saving rate leads to higher growth only for a while. • In the long run, the higher saving rate leads to a higher level of productivity and income, but not to higher growth in these areas.

  22. Catch-Up Effect • The catch-up effect refers to the property whereby countries that start off poor tend to grow more rapidly than countries that start off rich.

  23. Investment from Abroad • Governments can increase capital accumulation and long-term economic growth by encouraging investment from foreign sources. • Investment from abroad takes several forms: • Foreign Direct Investment • Capital investment owned and operated by a foreign entity. • Foreign Portfolio Investment • Investments financed with foreign money but operated by domestic residents.

  24. Education and Training • For a country’s long-run growth, education is at least as important as investment in physical capital. • In the United States, each year of schooling raises a person’s wage, on average, by about 10 percent. • Thus, one way the government can enhance the standard of living is to provide schools and encourage the population to take advantage of them.

  25. Education: continued • An educated person might generate new ideas about how best to produce goods and services, which in turn, might enter society’s pool of knowledge and provide an external benefit to others. • One problem facing some poor countries is the brain drain—the emigration of many of the most highly educated workers to rich countries.

  26. Property Rights and Political Stability • Property rights refer to the ability of people to exercise authority over the resources they own. • An economy-wide respect for property rights is an important prerequisite for the price system to work. • It is necessary for investors to feel that their investments are secure.

  27. Free Trade • Trade is, in some ways, a type of technology. • A country that eliminates trade restrictions will experience the same kind of economic growth that would occur after a major technological advance. • Some countries engage in . . . • . . . inward-orientated trade policies, avoiding interaction with other countries. • . . . outward-orientated trade policies, encouraging interaction with other countries.

  28. Research and Development • The advance of technological knowledge has led to higher standards of living. • Most technological advance comes from private research by firms and individual inventors. • Government can encourage the development of new technologies through research grants, tax breaks, and the patent system.

  29. Impacts of Population Growth • Economists and other social scientists have long debated how population growth affects a society. • Population growth interacts with other factors of production: • Stretching natural resources • Diluting the capital stock • Promoting technological progress

  30. Discussion 1 • If foreigners buy newly issued stock in Acer, and Acer uses the proceeds to expand capacity by building new plant and equipment, which will rise more: GDP or GNP? What do we call this type of investment?

  31. Discussion 2 • You are having a conversation with your roommate. The conversation turns to a supposed lack of growth and opportunity in Taiwan when compared to Some Asian countries such as China. Your roommate says, “ China must have cheated somehow. That is the only way they could have possibly grown so quickly.”

  32. Discussion 2: continued • The phenomenal growth rate of China since late 1970s has often been referred to as the “miracle”. Is it a miracle or is it explainable? • Are the high growth rate found in China without cost?

  33. Discussion 3 • List the capital inputs necessary to produce each of the following: • Cars • High school education • Plane travel • Fruits and vegetables

  34. Discussion 4 • Suppose that an auto company owned by German citizens opens a new factory in Taiwan. • What sort of investment would this represent? • What would be the effect of this investment on Taiwan’s GDP? Would the effect on Taiwan’s GNP be larger or smaller?

  35. Discussion 5: Constant Return to Scale? • Y= L+K • Y=(1/2)L+(1/3)K

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